All Episodes

October 14, 2025 55 mins

We share the chaos and charm of two farm dinners—one drenched mid-course and saved in the barn, the other a flawless do-over—then pivot to a late-night hotel scare in Atlanta, roof insurance headaches, internet “icks,” and the saga of a cat that won’t stop hitching rides. 


Don't forget to join our online community at WhosDrivingPodcast.com 

Join the conversation by calling their hotline at 864-982-5029 with your own stories or topic suggestions, and experience the authentic charm of two best friends who truly never know who's driving or where they're headed.

Look For The Water Bottle! Tap Here For Hidrate Spark water bottle.

Visit www.WesleyTurnerLiving.com to find so much more about all the things we do! 

Follow Steven on Instagram at @Keepinupwithsteven and follow Wesley on Instagram at @WesleyTurnerLiving.  Shop our online store at TheNestedFig.Com  Find The Nested Fig on Instagram at @TheNestedFig 

We mentioned The Nested Fig App in this episode. You can Tap Here to get our app and join our live sales 


Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
SPEAKER_00 (00:00):
Get your ass in here and buckle up.

(00:06):
We need some.
It's time for another episode ofFoos Driving.
Welcome to Who's Driving?
I'm Leslie Carter.
And I'm Steven Murphy with TwoBest Friends and Entrepreneurs.
Food's Driving is anentertaining look into the
behind the scenes of our lives,friendship, and business.

SPEAKER_01 (00:22):
These are the stories we share and topics we
discuss as two best friendswould on a long road trip.

SPEAKER_00 (00:28):
Along the way, we'll check in with friends and offer
a wide range of informativetopics centered around running
small businesses, social media,and all things coming fun.

SPEAKER_01 (00:37):
Buckle up and enjoy the ride.
You never know who's driving orwhere we're headed.

SPEAKER_00 (00:41):
All we know is it's always a fun ride.
Oh, we are back at it.
We left you hanging last week,right?
We did.
Life just got in the way.
It was it was a thing.
I am not situated.
Hold up.
Okay, I'm I'm here.
Me, me, me, me, me, me.
Uh so let's see.
Last week we had to skip ourpodcast episode.

(01:03):
It just got too busy.
It just got out of control.
My mom and my niece were here.
We were at market.
It was too much.
We were going to market.
We were going to PigeonforgedDollywood and didn't have time
to record, didn't have time toedit.
I was stressed.
I was like, we just got to skipit.

SPEAKER_01 (01:19):
We were war slap out.
Burning the candle at both ends.

SPEAKER_00 (01:23):
And it met in the middle.

SPEAKER_01 (01:24):
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.

SPEAKER_00 (01:25):
Uh, so we got to back it up though, because when
we left off, uh, it was the werecorded the Friday before the
first dinner in the dahlias.
We did.
Because we had to pre-record,came out that Tuesday between
the two.
So let's back this baby up tothem because a lot has happened

(01:50):
since then.
So we have had our two dinner inthe dahlias.
They were amazing.
Went great.
Except for no, it did all gogreat.

SPEAKER_01 (01:59):
Oh, hell no.
I forgot the first time.
Oh, it it went great except forthe chicken floating in the
rain.
You already forgot.
You already put it out of yourmemory.
Yeah, I did.
I blocked it's blocks, notforgotten.
Yeah.
No, it was it went really well.
And on it, there was nothing wecould do to plan, you know, and

(02:24):
it looked like it was going tomiss us.
And like you and I were talkingand giving our um opinions,
whether Daniel wants them ornot, we give them.
But I just felt like we neededto go as normal.
And then if it came a cloud andrain, then we we would run and
deal with it.

SPEAKER_00 (02:44):
That's what we did.
So yeah.
So a couple of episodes ago, wetalked about getting ready for
it.
And I was like, oh, the weatherlooks great.
Then the last episode, which wepre-recorded the day before the
actual first dinner in thedahlias, I was like, I don't
know, there's a chance of rain.
Well, we got up, got ready thatday, was getting everything
together, and it was partlycloudy, sunny.

(03:05):
So we were like, okay, it'sgonna be great.
So we waited to the very lastmoment that we could to get the
tables ready.
So Dylan and Steven were heresweating, hauling chairs and
sweating.

SPEAKER_01 (03:18):
I had in my fake ass and sweating and hauling chairs,
but we got it done.

SPEAKER_00 (03:24):
Yeah.
So at the last moment, we werelike, okay, it may or may not
rain.
So we are gonna go with it's notgoing to, we're gonna set it up
so that the presentation isthere, everyone gets the vibes
and the feel and that sort ofthing.
Friday, Daniel had cleaned outour barn, which is right next to
the flower um field and thedinner in the dahlia.

SPEAKER_01 (03:46):
So which is an airplane hanger.
It's not a rusty barn.
It's just a huge coveredairplane hanger.
Right.
It's not like it's some cow shitbarn.
Right, right, right.
Let's get that straight.
It sounds a little bad.

SPEAKER_00 (04:03):
Yeah, scoop the shit out of the barn.
No, it wasn't like that.
Um, but anyway, so we went aheadand had it like normal, and it
was going great.
It was a little cloudy, whichmade it just the right
temperature.
Everyone got here and got tohave their appetizers and their
drinks.
We did a little speech and afarm tour that they harvested
their flowers.

(04:23):
Everyone was loving it.
We sat down, we got through thesalad, and as soon as about a
fourth of the mane came out, thebottom fell out of.

SPEAKER_01 (04:37):
But I'd see, I was at one end, you were at one end,
and I told my people, okay,let's just remain calm.
It's maybe just a littlescattered shower, it's just
gonna move over us.
Yeah, and it got harder andharder, and I said, The hell
with it.
Get your plate.

SPEAKER_00 (04:53):
So we were like, grab your plate, grab your
chair, and go to the barn, whichwas right there.
And then, which for the guests,they all seemed to love it.
I think part of the experienceadded to the experience, and
they didn't get as wet as likeDaniel and I did, because Daniel
and I, and uh, some of theservers and I don't know, some
of Daniel's family, they wereall here.

(05:13):
Thank you, by the way, to hisentire family for helping out.
Um, and we all and his dad andjust grabbed the tables and we
so we were running in and out ofthe rain, and there were you
know, all these tables to moveunder under the barn.
And so we were soaking wet bythe um time it was done.
But the guests weren't that wet,they were fine, they were like

(05:35):
you were they went.

SPEAKER_01 (05:36):
I was I was very impressed with how they rolled
with it.

SPEAKER_00 (05:40):
Me too, and they did get like 90% of the experience
out of it.
It wasn't raining.

SPEAKER_01 (05:48):
And and I want to commend you.
You did very well.
Listen, we is with with Dylan'sum Dylan, with Daniel's mom
being here, you did so well.

SPEAKER_00 (06:01):
You're such a bitch.
Terry knows.
Okay, Terry knows that'sDaniel's mom, my mother-in-law,
who's Steven just my own, it'smy ongoing joke.
I love it.
And um, I love Terry.
I love all of Daniel's family,but Steven loves to terrorize.
But he went up to her at theparty and was like, I'm so glad

(06:24):
Wesley let you come.
But she laughed.
She laughed.

SPEAKER_01 (06:30):
She rolls with the joke.
It is it is funny, it is reallyfunny.
She's like, she's like, I knowhe does, I know it's not true,
but my friends probably don't.
Right.
It's so funny, but his wholefamily was here, and yeah, and
it was I I had never in 16years, I had never met his

(06:53):
youngest brother.

SPEAKER_00 (06:54):
Oh, you have so it was nice meeting for his wife.
Yeah, very nice.
Yes, they're all very nice andgreat family.
I'm lucky to have them.
Well, even his extended family,they're all super, super nice
people.

SPEAKER_01 (07:09):
They really like I haven't met one person in his
family.
I'm like, yeah.
Yeah.

SPEAKER_00 (07:13):
No, they're all good.
And so then which is more than Ican say for mom.
Um, and then uh the nextweekend, we had our second
round.
So we got a do-over and it wasperfect.
It was perfect, much better.
Everything I worked that wholeweek, I had it down to a
science.

(07:34):
When Steven got here, you didn'teven really have to do anything.

SPEAKER_01 (07:37):
Well, I had threatened you.
I was like, I we're coming infrom a market week.
Yeah, I better not have to haultoo much shit on the back.
I had all the flowers done, thetables done.
We really didn't do anything.

SPEAKER_00 (07:48):
We even sat and talked for like an hour or stood
and talked.
We really didn't do anything.
It was yeah, it was great.
And my mom and niece came tothat one.
I wish we had invited Daniel'sparents back, but they bailed on
us.
I think they didn't help again.
No, I'm just kidding.
I don't believe it.
Something that came up and theyum couldn't come back.

SPEAKER_01 (08:06):
I don't blame you because I wish they did a lot of
work.

SPEAKER_00 (08:08):
They did, but I wish like my mom and niece could have
been here when his family wasthere, but it didn't work out
because my niece was it was hershe's in school and it was her
fault um break.
So that's the weekend my mom hadto come.
So anyway, it and that one wentgreat.
We met so many people from allover.
That's what is really amazing.

SPEAKER_01 (08:28):
Um, and I was yeah, like I mean, there's so many
people that came like uh Bonniecame all the way from Houston.

SPEAKER_00 (08:38):
Yeah, we had like Houston, Minneapolis, Florida.
Um Delita came from Georgia.
Yep, Georgia.
We had a lot of Georgia people.
Um where's the Masters?
Augusta, Georgia, some I thinkWest Virginia or Virginia, one
of the Virginias.
Um Deanna from Hickory.

(08:58):
I mean Brooke from New YorkCity.
From New York City.
New York City.
She came to the farm.
Um Brook Farmhouse.
I hate it 1820.
1820.
Is that her farmhouse 1820?
Farmhouse something.
Draw a blank at the numbersevery time.

SPEAKER_01 (09:18):
I hate they couldn't stay longer because like we
didn't, we were not Dylan and Iwere not able to get to all had
been in.
Well, and they didn't come intown till later, so we couldn't
extend the hospitality theyextended to us.
But maybe next time next time.

SPEAKER_00 (09:40):
Yeah, farmhouse 1820.
I was right.
Shout out Brooke.
Follow her on Instagram,Farmhouse.
I love watching her storiesthough, because she lives um
outside.
Did we have her on here or no?
A long time ago?
No, I can't remember.
Anyway, yeah, I think we'vetalked to her before.
We did because she commutes likean hour, yeah.

(10:04):
Or two each way by train an hourin.
So, but so she lives in a coolold farmhouse, but then she
works in the city, so so you getto see both things if you don't
follow her.
But anyway, um, and then therewere these ladies from and they
were so fun.
So I try to walk up and down thetable when we're having the

(10:24):
dinner and talk to everyone andcarry on or whatever.
Daniel always gets tied down orsomething, and he's like, I'm so
glad you do that.
Um next time I'm gonna grab himand make him walk up and down
the table with me.
But they these ladies werehaving a good old time, and I
gotta see if you know where thisum is.
Uh Watery.

(10:46):
Watery?
Do you know where Watery, SouthCarolina?
Uh-huh.
I've seen it on the roadside.
Well, some I guess Watery thereis she's part of the chain of
lakes for um, I don't know.
Where were you this weekend?
You were talking about the lakesin the community you went
through?
Oh, um Glennville.

(11:08):
It might be part of the I don'tknow.
No, that's North Carolina.
Oh, hell, I don't know what I'mtalking about.
But anyway, um there saidthey're gonna invite us to the
lake.
And they seem like they would bea really fun time.
They live off of Highway 601.
Oh, down Norman, Lake Norman.

(11:29):
Is it part of the chain theywere saying of Lake Norman?
Like, I don't know, I guess itspills on down.
Who knows?
It was a lot of fun though.
So it was so much so cool justto meet everyone.

SPEAKER_01 (11:40):
There ain't big lakes here.
They live on a pond.
Yeah, I mean, it's a little bitbigger than a pond.

SPEAKER_00 (11:48):
I don't know what they were telling me, but it
they they seem like they'd be agood time to go visit.
Um, so yeah, so thanks toeveryone who came.
And if you're listening, survivethe rain with your chicken
floating in your plate.
Um, but it no, it it did allwork out, and that was great.
So moving on from the dinner inthe dahlias, the uh distracted

(12:12):
looking at watery, watery,uh-huh.
Uh moving on from that, uh,because I don't think anything
else happened.
It was good, it was great.
Nothing, no one got drunk andfell down in the you know,
flowers and we almost gotmurdered in Atlanta.
Oh, yeah, we got to get to thatstory.
Tell tell us that story.
Okay, the funny, the funniestthing is um if you are watching

(12:36):
this podcast, I don't know whatis going on with my nose, but it
is like tingling.

SPEAKER_01 (12:41):
Well, and the eight GAC people are here doing
maintenance and it issweltering.

SPEAKER_00 (12:47):
It's like 76 in here, and we got lights on us
now.
Steven's glistening.

SPEAKER_01 (12:52):
It's my glisten.
I am generally not a scaredperson.
No, you're yeah, you're not.
I'm not a scaredy cat, um, whichI probably should be many, many,
many times over, but I'm not.
So back up.

SPEAKER_00 (13:07):
So between actually you've gone to Atlanta two times
since we've had podcast, oncethe week between uh the two
dinner and the dahlias, and thenonce last week, um my mom was in
town, and you're like, hey, theygot in a bunch of new bags when
you were from the week before wesell some more.

(13:27):
And I said, That's perfect,because that gives me time with
my mom and niece, and you wentback to Atlanta.
Yeah.
So the first trip went amazing.
They all went amazing.
But last trip, you couldn't stayat your normal.

SPEAKER_01 (13:39):
No, we normally stay.
I mean, first of all, let's faceit, downtown Atlanta is, you
know, not the safest place tobe, period.
But we're very used to thatenvironment.
And, you know, the MarriottMarquee is fairly safe-ish.

SPEAKER_00 (13:59):
Yeah, I feel like it's safe because once you're in
there, you're in there.
Once you're in all youressentials, you don't have to
leave.

SPEAKER_01 (14:06):
So I went on the app to book us a room.
At the Marriott, where younormally stay.

SPEAKER_00 (14:11):
Yes.
Marquee.

SPEAKER_01 (14:13):
Um, because this trip we just stayed, we were
there two days and just onenight.
Yeah.
The last time we were there allweek.
Right.
And I said, you know, well, so Iwent on the app and it was like
$1,700.
Hell no.
We ain't got a lot of people.
I looked at all the hotelsaround market and it was uh it
was just outrageous.

(14:33):
And I said, Well, I'm not payingthat.

SPEAKER_00 (14:36):
So I went and I still think you need to buy us a
place down there and we couldjust solve this problem.

SPEAKER_01 (14:42):
Yeah, that's a conversation.
Um, so I went I I looked inBuckhead because I was like,
We're gonna be kind of close toBuckhead the night before from
that warehouse.
So I was like, okay.
So I booked a Fairfield Inn.
I'm like, okay, but that meanshow bad can that be?
Yeah.

(15:03):
Well, we got there and there wasa sign outside and it said, park
at your own risk.

SPEAKER_00 (15:09):
And I thought But I feel like that's common anywhere
now when you go.

SPEAKER_01 (15:13):
And in Atlanta, it is, even in Midtown.
So I'm like, okay.
Well, Dylan was like, I don'tknow about this.
You know, when we pulled in,he's a scaredy cat by nature.
He said, I don't know about it.
He's been protected.
I don't know about this.
And I was like, Oh, it'll befine.
So we check in, we go to bed.

(15:34):
It was it was not the bestMarriott property.
Yeah, it was not even at theFairfield level, it was not what
it should be.
But neither here nor there.
We're you know, I'm like, we'rehere, it's just one night.
1 30 in the morning, I wake upand I can hear the key card and

(15:54):
I hear the door unlock to ourroom.
Like, yeah.
And then then I could hear, andthen they were like hitting it,
like bam, bam.
Yeah.
I completely jumped out of bedand ran for the door.
And I don't know what Dylanthought I was gonna do.

(16:16):
Don't open it.
And I yelled some choice words,you know, what the blankety
blank blank.
And I wish you would have openedit though, just to see who it
was.
Well, the problem is I don'tknow who it was.
Right.
You know, I don't know.
But then I got to thinking,gosh, it's just all sketchy.

(16:36):
Like I did not want to call thefront desk because what if it
was the front desk people?
Right.
Because they had a key.
They had a key.
So how was the key programmed toyour room?
And it wasn't like somebody waschecking in at 1 35 a.m.
Yeah, it was very, veryunsettling.

SPEAKER_00 (16:58):
And because if they were checking in, they would
have said, Oh my gosh, they gaveme the wrong.

SPEAKER_01 (17:02):
Oh sorry.
Yeah.
So you yelled at what I'msaying.
And they screwed away.
It was multiple people, andthat's all I know.
Because you know, I wasn'tgonna, I did not have my peace
with me.
But it does make you think, youknow, when you're traveling like
that, because I mean someone, iflike Dylan is really bad about

(17:27):
not putting that safety latch.

SPEAKER_00 (17:28):
That's what I was gonna say.
I told you, like, a lot of timesI don't even put the safety
latch on.
I just I just don't even thinkabout someone, and I know it
happens and I see social mediastuff and like people, but I
like get in bed and I'm like, Idon't know.
It's fine.
But in my defense, I usually dothat like at the Marriott, which

(17:52):
I don't know if that's anybetter, but it does all open
into one big like corridor.
Corridor.
So I feel like I mean, I don'tknow.

SPEAKER_01 (18:01):
But yeah, yeah, I was like it totally derailed.
I'm sure it was it wasunsettling.
The what was unsettling is ifthat latch hadn't been on there,
they would have been in theroom.
And who knows what they wouldhave been taking your shit, and
maybe y'all.
Or maybe me.
I mean, if they had kidnappedme, they would have never

(18:23):
brought me back.

SPEAKER_00 (18:24):
Oh my gosh, I know that would have been crazy.
That is scary, that's veryscary, though, for something
like that to happen.
Because you normally, I feellike feel I normally feel safe
in a hotel unless it's a super,super sketchy.

SPEAKER_01 (18:39):
I have traveled literally all over the freaking
world, and I've never had anissue like that.
I mean, I have had ick placeslike you have put us in places
where I felt a littleuncomfortable for my safety.
Yeah.
Someone knocking on the door.
That's what I was saying.
Hello?

SPEAKER_00 (18:59):
Yeah, come on in.
You're fine.
I was like, is someone knockingor not?

SPEAKER_02 (19:04):
Yeah, I think I just said I didn't want to keep
knocking.

SPEAKER_00 (19:08):
Okay, you're fine.

SPEAKER_01 (19:10):
You're on our podcast.
Say hello.

SPEAKER_00 (19:15):
What's your name?

SPEAKER_02 (19:16):
Aaron.

SPEAKER_00 (19:17):
Aaron's Aaron.
Aaron, if you can get that airon for Steven over here, he is
sweating.
I'm melting.

SPEAKER_02 (19:26):
I'm getting up.
Oh gosh, that's funny.

SPEAKER_01 (19:32):
Okay, so literally, so the um H VAC guys here doing
the maintenance and thank Godhe's poking around trying to
find something wrong.

SPEAKER_00 (19:41):
You know, exactly.

SPEAKER_01 (19:42):
You know they do that.
They're like, you know, whenthey go out, like Tom or Bradley
one, they're like, okay, we needto you need to find like four
things wrong today.
So we need to pay pay makepayroll.
You're trying to find thingswrong, aren't you?

SPEAKER_00 (19:59):
Yeah.

SPEAKER_02 (20:04):
Oh god.

SPEAKER_00 (20:06):
Um so I'm kidding.
Yeah.
Um, I don't know though.
I mean, I'm we have greatservice people, not that, but
Steven and I think I've we maybeeven talked about it on here
before, but I've had housebefore this and I never got it
serviced, and the AC workedforever.
But you know what it is?

SPEAKER_01 (20:25):
And then they're not made.
Right.
The quality has gone.
It's just like refrigerators,cars, you name it.
Right.
It is not built to last.
Gone to shit.

SPEAKER_00 (20:38):
Gone to hell in a hand.
But we moved here.
When we moved to this house, wehave three AC units, and none of
them worked when we did.
And we still have the same ACservice.
He came the day we closed andlike and got us one unit, like,
piece together.

(20:58):
He's like, I don't know how longthis will last, but here is
something because it was thesummertime and it was like a
hundred degrees.

SPEAKER_01 (21:06):
But you don't spend all your money on this big farm
and it needed to work.

SPEAKER_00 (21:11):
We had to put in a uh window unit in one of the
rooms so we could sleep atnight, and then we had to
replace the units like one at atime for three years.
So like one of them didn't evenwork.
It did, yes, it was a lot ofmoney.
But anyway, um, so you survivedyour stay in in Atlanta.
I did, and we don't have anyconclusion to the story except

(21:33):
for you screamed at them everyday.

SPEAKER_01 (21:35):
I did email um Marriott and asked them to look
at the cameras, and they havenot gotten back to me.
They ain't gonna get back tothat.
No, they don't should havecalled someone, they didn't
care.

SPEAKER_00 (21:45):
You should have called the Popo and demanded
them to look at the city.
Somebody tried to get me.

SPEAKER_01 (21:51):
Somebody tried to get me.
So speaking of things that don'tlast and don't don't, you know,
that wear out, and you know,everybody that listens knows I'm
in real estate.
Um there's something new in thereal estate world that just
blows my mind.

(22:13):
It does and it doesn't.
What is it?
So since Helene, do tell, theypaid out insurance companies
paid out a lot of money.
Right.
And the roof.

SPEAKER_00 (22:25):
Yeah, they don't insure roofs anymore.
Or like you have to have a newroof and they'll only insure it
for so long.

SPEAKER_01 (22:31):
If it's over 10 years old before you close on
your house, you need to checkwith your insurance company.
I would recommend checking withthem before you go under
contract and say, hey, this roofis in great shape.
It's 12 years old.
I mean, it could be 15.
If it's a 30-year roof, it'sfine.
Right.
But just get confirmation thatthey will insure you.

(22:53):
Yeah.
And I get it.
I do, I I understand it and Idon't understand it.
But my thing is just, you know,raise the rates or do an
exemption.

SPEAKER_00 (23:04):
I don't know what you do, but it just Well, I
think there needs to be like awriter for a roof, or there
needs to be, Daniel and I wereactually talking about this the
other day because you've we'veyou've talked about it, and
basically, like they won'tinsure your roof or whatever.
And I kind of my thing is okay,for example, our house is

(23:24):
however many years old, 28, 9,whatever years old.
It's the original roof, it'sfine.
But if something happens to it,I feel like it needs to be the
level of what happened to it.
Because we've had people thathave come by and been like, oh,
there's been a hail storm inyour area, we can get you a new

(23:45):
roof or whatever.
And there's not enough damage oranything to do that.
So I really don't think theinsurance should pay for that.
But then if your roof gets blownoff from said hurricane or crazy
storm, then they should pay forit.

SPEAKER_01 (24:05):
And then, but maybe what they should do instead of
replacing the whole thing withhell damage, and I know you
can't say we will allot you Xthousand dollars.
Well, you have this much, we'llgive you$5,000 toward a new
roof.
Right.
But it's a one-time deal.
Maybe you know I don't know whatthe answer is.
I'm not an insurance person, butI'm just telling all my clients

(24:28):
now, just be aware.
Like if you decided to sell thefarm right now, I would tell you
we had to put a new roof on it.
Right.
I would know we got to put a newroof before we list it to make
nobody's gonna insure it at 28years old.
Right.
Even though it does not leak, itlooks good.
There's nothing wrong with it.
Which I don't jinx I don't wantto know.

(24:49):
Or knock on wood.
God, do you know how expensiveroofs are now?

SPEAKER_00 (24:54):
It's everything.
And the good thing is, ours, umthey the person who built our
house, the origin we're thethird owner of this house.
The people who built, had thehouse built, the first family
and lived here, he owned aroofing company or worked for, I

(25:15):
think he owned a roofingcompany.
And so he did a really good job.
He did a really high-end roof onit.
And we've been told that byother people that, like, oh,
this is a really, really goodroof.
So next time it'll be tar paper.

SPEAKER_01 (25:30):
You know, I okay, I know someone that put a roof on
in the past in the past fewweeks.
I'm not gonna get into too muchdetail because I don't want to
tell anybody's business.
Do you know how much it was?

SPEAKER_00 (25:44):
How big was the house?
Bigger than this.
So I I know my size.
So I'm guessing it was fiftythousand dollars.
Dang, did they put on a special?
Special.

SPEAKER_01 (25:59):
It was special, it was special, but I'm like, damn.
I mean, I'd have been like, canwe just get some we may have to
move just about I mean that wasa that was an exceptionally
special roof, but I'm like Isthere a lot of roof?
Roof?
Roof roof, roof, roof.

(26:22):
I used to say roof, roof, but Isay roof.
Roof means like a dog.
Rough roof.
That's like a Yankee says it.
Roof.
Roof.
Roof.
Roof.
Roof.
It's on the roof of the It's onthe roof of the house.
You know, some of my cha mylanguage changed because of

(26:44):
McDonald's.
And it's probably because I'dhad to talk with so many people
from Chicagoland.
Yeah.
And so I say things that likesomebody from Chicago would say,
I feel like sometimes.
I think roof might be one.
I'm looking to see.
We always had conversationsabout.

SPEAKER_00 (27:05):
Um I didn't say.
I guess roof is correct.
Roof like proof.
Um roof?
Roof.
Roof roof.
And roof rhyming with roof.
Um it's regional dialects.

SPEAKER_01 (27:28):
Well, my dialects are all confused anyway.

SPEAKER_00 (27:32):
Um in some parts of the United States, pronounce
roof to sound like roof,particularly in the upper
Midwest, New England, and theRocky Mountain region.
But roof like proof.
Roof.
Roof.

SPEAKER_01 (27:52):
So um I have a new ick.
Yeah.
And I'm anxious to see if youhave discovered this ick.
Because it just started.
Oh, let's see.
It I just found it.
I just wanted to vomit.
And I was like, I'm gonna watchthis throughout to see what they
do with this.
Yeah.

(28:13):
So they were making a pumpkinpie.
Okay.
I'm down for a pumpkin pie.
Love it.
With a fresh pumpkin, which isgreat.
Well, they cut the bottom off ofthe pumpkin about you know, two
inches, and then they theyscooped it out.
So you just got a pumpkin.

SPEAKER_00 (28:34):
They're not using that as like the crust or
something.

SPEAKER_01 (28:36):
Just let me finish.
Uh-huh.
They've got this.
It's just the dumbest thing I'veever seen.
So they mix their pumpkin pie,you know, their eggs and their
nutmeg and their filling.
Then they put pie shell down ontop of this pumpkin bottom.

(28:57):
That they're gonna bake and turninto baked it.
And it made me mad because, likeyou said, the pumpkin's gonna
turn to mush.
It's just a damn mess.
They they they just wasted adamn pie.
What are you even supposed to dowith the bottom?

(29:17):
And then then I said, the bestway to make a pumpkin says who?
I mean, it didn't it didn't evenmake sense because like you put
the crust in there that thatpumpkin is not and then that
crust isn't is gonna be soft andgooey because it's absorbing the

(29:38):
moisture and the steam from thepumpkin peanut.

SPEAKER_00 (29:44):
You know that's just a damn mess.
Did they wash their pie shell ina bathtub before they put it in
the pumpkin?

SPEAKER_01 (29:52):
There's just so many things I see, and I'm like, I I
want to hear more about thisstory.
You know, I mean.
Well, why did somebody thinkthat was a good idea?
Because you're gonna have to putit like you can't even take that
pie off of a cookie sheet.
Right.
Because it's just gonna be afloppy and I'm not even sure.

SPEAKER_00 (30:12):
So they use the pumpkin as as the dish,
basically, that they thencooked.
That is hilarious.
I mean it was the dumbest.
It was it was so dumb.
That's dumb.
That is dumb.
I haven't seen that one yet.
Hopefully.

(30:32):
I don't know.
I haven't seen as many icks onmy Instagram.
I don't know if we've gotten outof this doing dumb shit.
Like if the reality or if I havegotten rid of the people who do
the dumb shit.

SPEAKER_01 (30:44):
Well, I've seen a few of the let's scrub our
pumpkins.

SPEAKER_00 (30:48):
I haven't even seen that many of those this year.

SPEAKER_01 (30:51):
I've only seen it twice.
So maybe they're listening tous.
Well, maybe someone said you'regonna rot your pumpkin.

SPEAKER_00 (31:00):
Yeah.
Like maybe.
I don't know.
I don't know either.
That's crazy.
Um, speaking though, uh, thisisn't an ick or anything, but I
learned something.
What you know, sometimes youjust see something and you
learn.
And I'm like, huh, never knewthat.
Do you know what paprika is?

SPEAKER_01 (31:19):
No, but I love paprika.

SPEAKER_00 (31:21):
I hope it's not the gross.
It's not gross, but do you knowyou don't know what it comes
from?
I'd never thought about iteither.
I'm like, is is it a an herb ora tree that's ground up or
something?
No, you know what it is?
Paprika is just um red bellpeppers.
Red peppers that have been likedried dried and ground up.

(31:45):
Really?
They may be roasted before andthen yeah.
I was like, oh, I thought thiswas a good thing.
I mean, you can't have a deviledegg without some paprika on it.
And I put paprika on, oh, I wasmaking that squash, cutting it
and baking it.
Oh, so good.
And then adding that on top justbecause I just like the flavor.

(32:07):
It's made from ground dried redpeppers, ranging from sweet to
hot varieties.
Isn't that crazy?
I thought it was some kind ofspecial almost like a cinnamon,
like uh, I don't know.
Came from the paprika tree orbush or something.
I had no idea.
So that was that was my thing.

(32:29):
Oh, oh, oh, we haven't talkedabout we haven't talked about
the biggest news in the familytwice now.
We had we got updates on Mr.
Kitty.
Oh my Lord.
Okay.
That just makes me mad.
So I told the story on here afew weeks ago about Mr.

(32:54):
Kitty.
Y'all all know how we got Mr.
Kitty up.
Employee gave him to us, and hewent missing for a week.
Steven and I were coming out ofthe warehouse.
I was like, there's our catthat's been missing.
And the cat had evidently gottenup in my car, ridden with me to
the warehouse, jumped out,stayed there a week, found him,
brought him back home.
Okay.
That's that was the last story.

(33:16):
Well, over the last couple sincewe've been on here like since
last time.
Dahlia's days.
Well, from dinner and thedahlias.
But before that, the week beforethat, oh yeah.
It was the week between dinner,the two dinner and the dahlias.
Um, I noticed the cat one nightwas not here.

(33:37):
And he's always here and hecomes to my voice.
I don't know why he, I mean,I've just um the one that holds
him and pets him and try andthey get him tamer and that sort
of thing.
So he does come to me when hehears my voice.
So I got home.
It was a Tuesday night.
He wasn't here.
And I was like, okay, well,maybe he's just out doing
something.
The next day, all day, he wasn'toutside.

(33:59):
So I'm like, okay, the cat hasgone again.
So the only thing was the daythat he left, which would have
been Tuesday, I went from hereand I went and got Botox before
going to the warehouse.
So that was like from here, whatis that?
Probably like to the malls, like15, 20 miles to the mall.

(34:22):
And then from there to ourwarehouse is probably like five
miles or so.
Yeah, at least.
And I was like, oh my gosh, heis gone.
I guess he jumped out.
He probably jumped out at theBotox place, doctor, whatever.
So I was at the warehouse and Iwas there late and I was like,
well, when I leave here, I'mgonna drive by the Botox doctor

(34:42):
and see if I see him in theparking lot or something.
I don't know.
Well, before I did that, Iwalked outside and I was like,
well, let me just make sure hedidn't ride all the way here.
Walked around the corner fromthe warehouse, pulled out my
phone, and I did show it onInstagram.
He was there on the dumpster,Mr.
Kitty, right there, eating alittle snack from the waffle

(35:04):
house, I guess, or maybe thechicken wing place.
I don't know.
So I got Mr.
Kitty, brought him home.
That's when you were in Atlantaand you call me and you're like,
you mean to tell me that damncat took a ride again?
And I said, I've never seen acat do this over and over again.
Right.
So I brought the cat back home.

(35:24):
That was like Thursday night.
Well, you come to dinner in thedahlias on park in front of the
garage on Saturday, and Stevengoes to leave, and I'm like,
hold up, wait a minute.
We got to make sure Mr.
Kitty isn't in your car orwhatever.
I blew the horn.
Steven blew the horn.

(35:44):
We shut the doors.
I called the cat.
He wasn't any, he didn't come,wasn't anywhere to be found.
But see, my family was here.
Daniel's outside.
So I was like, you just go aheadand go.
So Steven and Dylan leave, andthen like, I don't know, 20
minutes later, Steven calls me.
Well, your damn cat's at the QT.

(36:06):
And I was like, what are youtalking about?
Your cat's at the QT.
Come get it.

SPEAKER_01 (36:15):
So Dylan, I I got out to pee.
And Dylan got an ice cream.
Well, I got back in the car, andI guess all this moving and kind
of alerted him we're stoppedsomewhere.
Well, then right as Dylan cameout, he jumped, and then I saw
him running.
Yeah.
And but Dylan saw him jumpingout of from under the car, the

(36:38):
engine.
Yeah.
And he he bounced.

SPEAKER_00 (36:41):
Like we couldn't.
He's a fast little rider.
I mean, he was gone like andhe's really good at hiding too.
Even like around.
I'm like, where are you?
Where do you come from?
So he and you went.
And he was yeah.
So Steven calls, he's like, Yourdamn cats at the QT.
He thought I was lying.
And I said, No, he's not.

(37:02):
He's like, Yeah, he is.
I shouldn't have said anything.

SPEAKER_01 (37:07):
I should have just let it have ended.

SPEAKER_00 (37:11):
So me and Daniel and my mom and my niece, we all get
in the truck.
We go down to the QT, and I'mhere, Mr.
Giddy, giddy, giddy.
And I'm like, y'all be quietbecause he won't come to anyone
but me.
He didn't come.
I was like, it's fine.
So for the next week, literallyevery couple of days, it was

(37:33):
kind of funny.
Okay.
So that happened on Saturday.
So then on Sunday, I can'tremember what we did on Sunday
with my mom.
I don't know, but we drove bythere again.
We were leaving the farm anddrove by there and was like,
hey, kitty, whatever.
Didn't find the cat.
Then on Monday, we went toPigeon Forge.

(37:56):
And so we drove through there onthe way out because I passed
this gas station anywhere I haveto go.

SPEAKER_01 (38:02):
It's right beside one of my old McDonald's, right
there.
Drive by it all the time.

SPEAKER_00 (38:06):
And so no matter where I go, I passed this gas
station.
So I just would drive throughthe parking lot.
So we were headed to PigeonForge.
And I was like, oh Lord, if wefind the cat, we got to turn
around, even though it's just afew miles.
But didn't find the cat.
So we were gone Monday, Tuesdaynight.
We came back through.
I don't know.
One of the days in the middle ofthe week, we were back, and my

(38:27):
mom and my niece were in thecar, and we're like, let's just
ride through and see if we seethe cat.
So we rode through and we didn'tsee the cat.
And my niece, she's six, and shegoes, It's okay.
I don't even really like catsanyway.
She was not at all concernedabout the cat at all.

(38:48):
And so it was just so cute.
She was just like, it's okay.
It'll be, he'll be fine, is whatshe said.
I don't even really like catsanyway.
We were laughing.
So then I don't know if I wentthrough there the next day, but
on Saturday, so this was oneweek after um He hitched a ride
with you.
He hitched a ride.

(39:09):
I was coming back from thewarehouse.
It was late.
I mean, like 10 or something.
It was later at night.
I was like, well, let me justcircle through for the fun of
it.
Because it became one of these,like, I'm gonna find the cat a
game.
Like the cat's there, I'm gonnafind it, or whatever.
And I was like, eventually he'llbe comfortable enough.
Maybe I'll, you know, see him orwhatever.

(39:29):
Well, there he was, laid up bythe fence, just in the grass.
And I was pulled up.
Was I talking to you?
Mm-mm.

SPEAKER_01 (39:37):
You were talking to Daniel, I think.

SPEAKER_00 (39:39):
No, I was talking to you.
Uh, because I said, Oh no, I'llcall you back, or whatever.
I was like, there's the damncat.
And so I pulled up and I waslike, Hey, Mr.
Kitty, and here he came over.

SPEAKER_01 (39:52):
We need to change his name to damn it.

unknown (39:54):
Damn it.

SPEAKER_00 (39:56):
So Mr.
Kitty has returned to the farm.
And yesterday, which was Sunday,I was going to the warehouse,
couldn't find him, so I tookDaniel's van because I was like,
I had seen him 30 minutes beforeget in my truck because I
figured out what he's doing ishe stays in our garage, which
I'm not parking in because he'sin there or whatever.

(40:18):
And but our garage has a dogdoor or a cat door.
So he comes in and out.
Well, what he's doing is like ifwe go outside or something, the
dogs will run out with us.
And the dogs, when he sees them,he bolts and jumps up in my
truck, like underneath it.
And so he's doing it to get awayfrom them.

(40:39):
And I saw him do that and like30 minutes before I was leaving
for the warehouse.
But then I came back inside andI was getting ready.
So then I was leaving and I waslike, where's the cat?
And I'm trying to like crawl upunder my truck, put my phone
camera up under there.
I couldn't find him.
So I took Daniel's van.
That was last night.
So I got home, Mr.
Kitty was here.

(41:00):
So today just arrived as Stevenwas getting here.
I now have an air tag and a catcollar.
Did you put it on him?
I haven't put it on him yet.
Because I currently have himlocked in the garage, like
supposed to be our mud roomarea.
Because the AC guys here thatparked where you parked.

(41:20):
Oh, yeah.
Well, I parked out at theworkshop.
This time.
But the AC guys parked where youparked for dinner in the
downdoors.
I would have been in it.
So I was like, let me go roundup the cat and put lock him up
somewhere.
So when we're done with thepodcast, I'm gonna put the
collar on him.
It's active and reading.

SPEAKER_01 (41:38):
Be very careful when you walk up in there because
you're probably gonna slide upin some cat shit.

SPEAKER_00 (41:43):
Hopefully, he's only been in there like an hour, so
maybe he'll be fine.
I don't know.
Oh my gosh.
I just have never had a cat.
And I know cats do this, andlike a lot of people, you know,
I'm sorry, but some of you catpeople are just cray, cray.
I'm not gonna say crazy, butoverly concerned, I guess is

(42:07):
what we'll say.
Well, I have cat people in myfamily, and they're and I like
all if you know me, I like allanimals.
Hell, I like cats.
That's why I was like, yeah,we'll take the cat.
We already have two cats.
All of our cats live outside,they're fine.
We always get a cat as a kittenwhen it's been abandoned to
someone.
We bring it inside and raise ituntil it, you know, it gets

(42:29):
comfortable and used to going inand out.
Then we'll get to where it justgoes out and then it lives
outside.
Like we don't keep litter boxesonce they're grown or anything
like that.
They might come in and sleep thenight, but they don't use the
bathroom in the house orwhatever.
This cat, I've never had onethat's like gotten up in cars so

(42:50):
much that I don't know, it'sdifferent.
But everyone's like, oh, it'strying to find a woman.
Well, it's not, it's a kittenand it's fixed.
Um, you need to, it just needsto be an inside cat.
And I'm like, no, it's a feralcat.
It needs to be outside and it'sshit all over the house.
So it's not coming inside.
Um it comes inside, it's gonnabe a dead cat.

(43:13):
Yeah.
I mean, like last night Ibrought him in for five minutes
and like held him and pet himand stuff like that.
Then he has to go.
Then he has to go back outside.
Um, what else do people?
Oh, he's trying to get warm.
Well, it ain't even been coldyet.
It's like 80 something degreeshere today.

SPEAKER_01 (43:29):
Well, I said that too, though.
You know, we had some coldnights.

SPEAKER_00 (43:33):
But that ain't when he went missing.
It's been hot.
But anyway.
Then I said I was ordering theair tag and a collar, and then
everyone's like, make sure it'sa breakaway collar.
And I'm like, listen, there isonly so much I can do for this
kitty.

SPEAKER_01 (43:50):
Well, if he can't if he hitches a ride with me, I'll
tell you about eight weekslater.

SPEAKER_00 (43:54):
Well, I'm gonna be able to track him now.
Be like, where is my just backover?
Oops, you would know.

SPEAKER_01 (44:03):
Found your cat.
He's flat.
No.
No, I'm I'm an animal lover.
I mean, I talk big, but I have aI have a weakness for the little
it it became one of thosethings, though.

SPEAKER_00 (44:16):
I was like, well, this cat's gonna be fine.
He's been fixed, and heevidently has some street
smarts.
If he can hitch these rods andnot get killed and survive, I'm
like, he'll be fine if I don'tfind him, but it became a I want
to find the cat just for theplot line at this point.
He that little cat is like abadass.

SPEAKER_01 (44:40):
Yeah.
I mean, he is if he were aperson, he would be maybe we
need to call him Mr.
Bad.
He's a badass.
No, or badass.
Badass.
I mean, he would be he would beone one tough cookie if he were
an adult.
He would probably be hopping ontrains and riding them wherever.

SPEAKER_00 (45:00):
Yeah, just it's funny that I've just never had
one do that.
But anyway, so that's thisthat's the storyline of Mr.
Kitty, and we'll see where hegoes from.

SPEAKER_01 (45:14):
I just can't believe that somebody on, you know, it's
nobody's got him.
He won't go to anybody.

SPEAKER_00 (45:19):
No, he won't go to anybody else.
Okay, I saw moving on from Mr.
Kitty, then we gotta wrap thisbaby up.
But another saying that I thinkI've been saying wrong, but now
I'm not sure if I've said itwrong or not.
Say it the way you say it.
Well, I mean, it's I'm gonnagive you the hint and then
hopefully you'll say like ifsomething is how do you say

(45:39):
this, like mind-blowing kinda,or um like a lot of commotion,
it's nerve racking.
Yes.
I think I say nerve wreckinginstead of nerve racking.
Like it's nerve nerve wracking.
No, it's racking.

(46:00):
That is just nerve wracking.
Nerve wracking is the correctsaying, but I think I say nerve
wrecking.
You probably do.

SPEAKER_01 (46:08):
You think?
Probably, probably a lot wrong.

SPEAKER_00 (46:11):
That's true.
Hell, I've said a lot wrong allday long, every day.
Nerve wracking, nerve wracking.
Maybe I say nerve wracking.
That's what I'm saying.
I can't remember how I say it.
You read that and it's confusedyou.
You'll notice the next time yousay it.
Nerve wracking.
Nerve wracking.

SPEAKER_01 (46:27):
I bet I say racking.
I've never noticed you say thatwrong.
Do I ever say that?
I don't, I don't think.
I've never noticed you saying.
I mean, I've noticed you sayingI ate instead of I ate.
No, I do not.
I ate.
No, I don't say that one.

SPEAKER_00 (46:48):
I'm kidding.
I seen that.
I seen that.
I don't say that either.
Oh.
No, no, no, no.
All right.
You got anything else for usbefore we wrap this baby up and
pull it over?
No, that's it.
Okay, so hopefully next weekwe're back on track and have
another episode.
We should be.
We got a busy week coming up.
So if you are listening in realtime, um, such as Tuesday, I

(47:13):
think that'd be October 15thwhen this comes out.
I think is the day.
But um this week, this currentweek.
On October 13th.
14th.
14th is tomorrow.
Okay.
On October 14th, 15th, 16th,whatever, Tuesday, Wednesday,
Thursday of this week, we aredoing um, we're doing live sales

(47:36):
every day inside the nested figout.
We just launched our Christmascollection, and we actually have
like 24 more palettes ofChristmas arriving this week.
So we are um having three livesales a day, one-ish, four-ish,
and eight-ish p.m.

(47:56):
on each day, Eastern time,Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday,
inside the Nested Fig App.
So come join us.
We're launching our Christmas.
Well, it's already launched, butwe're going to be showing you
tons of Christmas for three daysinside the Nested Fig App.
If you don't have our app yet,go to your app store for your
phone, tablet, Android, orApple.
We are there.
Search the Nested Fig.
You can also find it in thecomments of the show notes down

(48:16):
below.
What have you got for me?
So I have to say, I have to saythis because it just popped up
on my phone.

SPEAKER_01 (48:22):
You'll probably heard it.
I had to look at it.
So um in the news here in theupstate.
Oh, we're just gonna continue onnow.
Well, I just have to tell I haveto tell them this.

SPEAKER_00 (48:35):
Um in the news in the upstate of South Carolina.

SPEAKER_01 (48:39):
Uh-huh.
Not here, but in Union.
Yeah.
It's kind of where's kind of outthere.
Out toward Newberry, towardsColumbia?
Yeah.
Okay, so we don't claim thatarea, but anyway.
No.
Uh two girls set a dog on fire.
Oh my god.
Well, they were arrested.

(49:00):
But here, okay, here is what Ithink.
Okay, this is I need to be ajudge.
Oh, no, you don't.

SPEAKER_00 (49:07):
Because you don't need to be a judge, and I don't
need to be a police officer.

SPEAKER_01 (49:12):
I think those two women, if it's true, if found
guilty, I say we set them onfire and let them run run for
it.
See how they how they like it.
Isn't that horrible?
That is crazy.
I mean, as much as I cuss thatdamn cat for catching rides all

(49:32):
over the place, how could anyhuman I I I don't even know?

SPEAKER_00 (49:36):
What is wrong with you to think like, oh, let's see
what happens, or like it'sdisgusting.
Yeah, there's something badwrong with you.

SPEAKER_01 (49:44):
There are people I would rather set on fire than an
animal.
That is true.

SPEAKER_00 (49:50):
Well, that is true.
Leave it right there, leave ithanging.

SPEAKER_01 (49:55):
But yeah, isn't that just disturbing?
Very much so.
They have there, they they havemental problems.
They need to be in a mentalhospital.
But that's it.
After they get their ass beat.
Seriously.

SPEAKER_00 (50:07):
Well, I'm glad you um Yeah, I ended it up on that
uplifting note.
Yeah, I'm glad you could throwthat right in there for us.
So we'll have to follow it.
Maybe they'll maybe they'll haveoh no, I did want to follow up
on another story um on a goodnote, but I don't have the full
facts, but I'm gonna give youthe rundown.
Remember on the last episode,the girl that was getting money

(50:31):
for the house?
Remember that or whatever?
Yes.
So, okay, good and bad news.
One, the house went undercontract.
She didn't get it.
But two, she raised all themoney, like 170.
So she can buy her another shecan buy the house.
So as of right now, it's stillunder contract.

(50:51):
The dad has reached out to theperson that is buying the house.
And again, I haven't watched itin the last few days, so there
could be new developmentsbecause it could have fallen
through and she can still haveit.
But if not, she they did talk tothe guy who's buying it, and
it's like not gonna be hisforever home, maybe like a few
years, and then he's has saidthat you know he'll give them

(51:14):
first dibs on getting the house.
On getting the house orwhatever, so it's not a you
know, permanent no.
I mean, she's only 14.
And how great is that?
I know, but he raised all themoney.
But then you know what alsoirritates me.
And if anyone here sent hermoney and you did this, I don't
like you.
So then the dad was saying, sothey raised all the money, and I

(51:35):
think when they raised the moneyamount of the house, they turned
it off, like they tried to stop,you know, like accepting stuff
or whatever.
But they're putting it, and hehas been in accounting or
whatever, and he's like, I'msetting it up, it's all going to
her, it'll be there when thehouse becomes available.
If this one doesn't becomeavailable, then she'll have it

(51:59):
to buy put towards a house orwhatever.
So it's gonna be her money, it'sgonna go for a house.
Some people ask for theirdonation back.

SPEAKER_01 (52:06):
I was like, that just you know, that goes that's
right up there with settingsomebody on fire.
I mean, why would you do that?
Right.

SPEAKER_00 (52:18):
Why why?
Okay, first of all, I don't evenknow why.
That is like Okay, becausehere's my thing.
I think I've talked about thisbefore.
This is my kind of charity thatI like to donate to.
I will randomly see someone likethis, and I'm like, oh, that
touches me.
I'm gonna send them whatever itis, um, because I know it's

(52:41):
going directly to that person.
But when I make that decision, Igo in my brain, I'm like, well,
if they don't use it for this, II mean, that's on them.
I don't give it with thestipulation.
I'm giving you the donation.
If you take it and do whatever,then that's on you.
That's fine.

(53:01):
That would you just likehomeless people.
That was your opportunity.

SPEAKER_01 (53:04):
I have people chastise you never have, by the
way.
Yeah, chastise me for givinghomeless people money.
Right.
Well, they're just gonna use itfor drugs and alcohol, and my
response is always the same.
Well, if I were homeless, Iwould use it for drugs and
alcohol too.
Right.

SPEAKER_00 (53:22):
It's and you probably would too.
So shut up.
Right.
Steven does like to givehomeless people.
I can't help it money.
I can't help it.

SPEAKER_01 (53:30):
And it it, you know, and I listen, if they need to,
if they can buy a pint, buy apint.
If they can buy Big Mac, buywhatever they need to get
through the day.
That's right.
All I'm doing.
Right.
And I that's why that littlegirl, that's horrible.
I wonder, surely, I hope notthat many people ask for their
money.

(53:50):
I'm sure not.
I mean, hopefully not, but didthey return it to the people
that I asked?

SPEAKER_00 (53:55):
Yeah, the dad said, if you want your money back, you
can message us and we'll, youknow, give it back.
But I'm like, I would.
You're an asshole if you did it.

SPEAKER_01 (54:02):
You're an asshole.
And I would be.

SPEAKER_00 (54:04):
And if you're listening and you did that and
you donated and won it back, youneed to du you need to donate
double to make me happy back toher.
That's the only way you canerase it.
No.
Oh my gosh, because you shouldbe donating without stipulation.
Stipulations.
All right, we're gonna pull thisbaby over.
Remember to leave us a reviewwherever you're listening to the
podcast, but only if it's a goodone.

(54:25):
Yes.
Right?
Also, remember you can join ouronline community at who's
drivingpodcast.com or you canwatch the episode.
I scratched my nose through theentire episode.
I don't know why it's itching.
It's like itching like a like umtwitch on my kind of bizarre.
I'm like, why is my noseitching?
It wasn't doing that until I satdown.

(54:46):
But anyway, you can join theonline community there at
whosdrivingpodcast.com, or youcan also listen for free there
uh if you just want a website togo to.
But you can listen to ourpodcast anywhere you listen to
podcasts, Spotify, ApplePodcasts, Google, wherever
everywhere.
Just find it.
If you can find Taylor Swift onthere, you can find us.
And we're better.

(55:07):
Uh about that.
All right.
Bye, y'all.
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Las Culturistas with Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang

Las Culturistas with Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang

Ding dong! Join your culture consultants, Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang, on an unforgettable journey into the beating heart of CULTURE. Alongside sizzling special guests, they GET INTO the hottest pop-culture moments of the day and the formative cultural experiences that turned them into Culturistas. Produced by the Big Money Players Network and iHeartRadio.

Crime Junkie

Crime Junkie

Does hearing about a true crime case always leave you scouring the internet for the truth behind the story? Dive into your next mystery with Crime Junkie. Every Monday, join your host Ashley Flowers as she unravels all the details of infamous and underreported true crime cases with her best friend Brit Prawat. From cold cases to missing persons and heroes in our community who seek justice, Crime Junkie is your destination for theories and stories you won’t hear anywhere else. Whether you're a seasoned true crime enthusiast or new to the genre, you'll find yourself on the edge of your seat awaiting a new episode every Monday. If you can never get enough true crime... Congratulations, you’ve found your people. Follow to join a community of Crime Junkies! Crime Junkie is presented by audiochuck Media Company.

The Brothers Ortiz

The Brothers Ortiz

The Brothers Ortiz is the story of two brothers–both successful, but in very different ways. Gabe Ortiz becomes a third-highest ranking officer in all of Texas while his younger brother Larry climbs the ranks in Puro Tango Blast, a notorious Texas Prison gang. Gabe doesn’t know all the details of his brother’s nefarious dealings, and he’s made a point not to ask, to protect their relationship. But when Larry is murdered during a home invasion in a rented beach house, Gabe has no choice but to look into what happened that night. To solve Larry’s murder, Gabe, and the whole Ortiz family, must ask each other tough questions.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.